Ira Donell Bowser v. State of Mississippi

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2015
Docket2014-KA-01283-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Ira Donell Bowser v. State of Mississippi (Ira Donell Bowser v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ira Donell Bowser v. State of Mississippi, (Mich. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2014-KA-01283-SCT

IRA DONELL BOWSER a/k/a IRA BOWSER a/k/a IRA D. BOWSER

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/16/2014 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROGER T. CLARK COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: OFFICE OF THE STATE PUBLIC DEFENDER BY: HUNTER NOLAN AIKENS ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: LAURA HOGAN TEDDER DISTRICT ATTORNEY: JOEL SMITH NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL - FELONY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 10/29/2015 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., PIERCE AND COLEMAN, JJ.

COLEMAN, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Ira Bowser admitted to killing Shabree Page at their apartment on June 9, 2012. The

question at trial was whether Bowser’s actions were a product of deliberate design murder,

second degree murder, heat of passion manslaughter, or self defense. The jury returned a

verdict of deliberate design murder, and the trial court sentenced Bowser, as a habitual

offender, to life in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections. On appeal,

Bowser challenges the weight and sufficiency of the evidence. We find sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict of murder and that the jury’s verdict is not against the

overwhelming weight of the evidence; therefore, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. At 2:14 on the morning of June 9, 2012, Officer Mickey Moran received a call about

an abandoned car on Oak Park Drive, right off of Highway 90, in Long Beach, Mississippi.

The vehicle was registered to Joyce Lynn Bowser, and Officer Moran went to the address on

record. Ira Bowser’s niece, Shronda Bell, was the only person at the residence. Bell told

Officer Moran that the car belonged to Bowser. After Officer Moran left, Bell then went to

the apartment Page shared with Bowser. When she arrived at Page’s home, the door was

locked, and no one initially came to the door. Bell eventually got Page’s five-year-old

daughter to open the door. Once inside, Bell found Page lying on the floor, and she then

immediately “ran out and grabbed the baby and put her in the car,” before calling 911. Officer

Moran was dispatched to the scene where he again talked to Bell, who was still at Page’s

apartment. Officer Moran went into the apartment and found Page lying naked on the floor

with what appeared to be puncture wounds all over her body.

¶3. Ira Bowser, Page’s boyfriend, turned himself in and admitted to killing Page. Bowser

testified that, at the time he left Page’s house, he did not know he had stabbed Page twenty-

nine times. He said:

In my mind[,] I’m fixing to leave because she is fixing to call the police and I’m going to go to jail again, you know what I’m saying. I didn’t look around. I looked her directly in her eyes and she was looking at me, and I seen pain in her eyes, and I just jumped up and took off straight out the door. I didn’t lock no door when I left.

2 Bowser stated he did not know where he was going, but that he “headed east on Highway 90.”

He then parked his car, and walked into the water, losing his phone in the process. He said

that he thought the police would be looking for him. Eventually, he came upon a girl he went

to high school with who told him that Page had been found dead. Bowser testified that he

threw up instantly when he was told Page was dead. Bowser said at that point he was “gone,”

and so he went to a hotel, lay on the floor in the lobby, and asked the clerk to call the police

because he had “murdered” his girlfriend.

¶4. After Bowser turned himself in, he was photographed for any injuries he may have

sustained. He had several small scratches on his right hand, right forearm, right wrist, and the

right side of his neck. The scratches did not bleed.

¶5. Bowser was indicted for deliberate design murder. He was tried before a jury on July

15-16, 2014. The issue at trial was whether Page’s death was the result of deliberate design

murder, depraved heart murder, heat of passion manslaughter, or self defense. At trial, the

State presented DNA evidence and fingerprint evidence pointing to Bowser as the perpetrator.

The State also presented numerous photos of the crime scene, depicting the couch askew in

the living room, a cell phone on the floor in the living room, torn underwear in Page’s

bedroom, bloody footprints leading from the bedroom, and Page’s body, covered in her own

blood. Further, the State presented the expert who performed the autopsy, Dr. Paul McGarry,

who testified that Page was stabbed twenty-nine times; the stab wounds were on Page’s upper

torso from her waist to her scalp; and the stab wounds ranged from one inch deep to five

inches deep. Dr. McGarry also testified that the wounds were “consistent with repeated

3 deliberate aimed thrusts of a stabbing object directly into the center of a person’s body

repeatedly and with great force.”

¶6. Bowser testified on his own behalf, and Bowser’s testimony is the only testimony

establishing the relationship between Bowser and Page and the events of the evening leading

up to Page’s death. Bowser testified that he and Page had known each other for more than

twenty years. Their relationship was not always peaceful. They had broken up and gotten

back together numerous times. Bowser admitted he had cheated on Page, and he said that, at

times, she would cut him. Bowser qualified that Page was not trying to take his life; she did

it when she had caught him cheating. The week before June 9, both Bowser and Page went

to jail for a domestic dispute, but within a couple of days of their release from jail, they were

talking and seeing each other again.

¶7. Bowser further testified that on the evening of June 9, Page had asked Bowser to come

to her house in Pass Christian, Mississippi. Bowser stated that he took his time getting to

Page’s house, stopping to get alcohol and drugs. He said he had not called Page all day, and

she was upset with him. They started arguing before Bowser got in the door about whether

he was going to use his key to enter the house or whether she was going to let him in because

she was on the couch. Bowser testified that:

Well, at first she was fussing, and she got in front of me. And I was trying to go get in the bed. I was like move, you know what I’m saying. She like, you ain’t going to tell me where you been, you need to go back to who you been with. I’m like, I’m fixing to get in the bed, get out the way, you know what I’m saying. I pulled her hair. She hit me. And I tried to grab her, you know what I’m saying. When I started to grab her, I grabbed her by her shirt. She come out her shirt, you know what I’m saying. She got on the bed.

4 ...

I was trying to grab her to hold her so she would stop. Usually if I hold her for a minute she will chill out, you know what I’m saying.

...

But she come out the shirt, you know what I’m saying. She got on the bed. I tried to grab her again. I grabbed her by her underwear, shorts, whatever she had on, and she kicked out, you know what I’m saying. She kicked me. I kind of fell back or whatever. I don’t know, I guess the knife was on the table right there. We keep stuff like that in the room. She grabbed it. Not saying she was trying to hurt me with it, nothing like that. I don’t know, I mean, she grab a knife, swing, but, I mean, ain’t like she came at me like this or nothing, I don’t know.

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